Ash v. Isaacson

195 A. 700, 59 R.I. 407, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 22, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 195 A. 700 (Ash v. Isaacson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ash v. Isaacson, 195 A. 700, 59 R.I. 407, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 182 (R.I. 1937).

Opinion

*408 Baker, J.

This is an action of assumpsit brought against the defendant as executrix- of the last will and testament of *409 Edward Isaacson, late of the city of Warwick. The case was tried in the superior court to a jury, which returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $2200. The defendant has prosecuted a bill of exceptions to this court containing exceptions taken by her to certain rulings of the trial justice made during the course of the trial, to his refusal to direct a verdict in her favor, and to his denial of her motion for a new trial, which motion contained the usual grounds and also the ground of newly discovered evidence.

The record before us shows that the instant case is based on.a claim which the plaintiff maintains she has against the estate of Edward Isaacson. It is admitted by the defendant that the plaintiff is properly before the court, and that she has complied with all the necessary formalities in connection with prosecuting her claim, such as filing it in the probate court, showing a disallowance by the executrix and the commencing of suit within the proper time. The plaintiff’s claim, which amounts to $3377.50, is founded on an alleged agreement which she contends she entered into orally in September 1917, with her brother and her half brother, who was Edward Isaacson, that said brothers would each pay her the sum of $5 a week for the support and maintenance of the mother of the three parties while she lived with and was taken care of by the plaintiff. The present case is grounded on the breach by Edward Isaacson of this alleged agreement. The defendant herein has denied the existence of any such agreement between the plaintiff and Edward Isaacson, who was the defendant’s husband, and has pleaded the general issue, the statute of limitations and the statute of frauds. The last-named defense, however, is not now being pressed.

At the conclusion of all the evidence, the defendant asked that the trial justice direct the jury to return a verdict in her favor, and to the denial of this motion she duly excepted. In support of her motion, the defendant urged that the present action was improperly brought by the plaintiff, who was *410 a married woman living with her husband at the time the alleged agreement was made, and up to the date of Edward Isaacson’s death; and that if any action lay, it could be maintained only by the husband, who was responsible for the support of his family, and entitled to such moneys as might be paid for the support of the plaintiff’s mother while living in his household. In our opinion this contention of the defendant is not sound in view of all the facts and circumstances appearing in evidence.

The record shows that the house in which the plaintiff, her husband and her mother lived stood in the name of the plaintiff, and that all the nursing and care given to the mother, who was an elderly'woman of large frame and in poor health, was given by the plaintiff personally. Such money as was paid for the mother’s support and maintenance was paid directly to the plaintiff. Her husband was not a party to the alleged contract at all, but if made, it was between the plaintiff individually and her two brothers.

The property rights of married women are dealt with in general laws 1923, chapter 290. Section 1 of that chapter provides, among other things, that such property as a married woman may acquire by her own industry shall remain her sole and separate property. Section 3 of the same chapter reads as follows: “A married woman may make any contract whatsoever the same as if she were single and unmarried, and with the same rights and liabilities”, and sec. 14 states that: “In all actions, suits and proceedings, whether at law or in equity, by or against a married woman, she shall sue and be sued alone.” In view of the obviously broad powers granted by sec. 3, supra, the right of the plaintiff, under ordinary circumstances, to enter into an express contract with her brother and half brother, and to enforce all her rights under that contract, cannot well be questioned, but here such right must be considered in its relation to the recognized right of a husband, living in and supporting his *411 household, to receive all moneys paid for board and lodging furnished therein, except in certain exceptional instances.

In support of her position, the defendant refers us to Cory v. Cook, 24 R. I. 421. In that case the defendant, a married woman living with her husband, sought to set off, in an action against her on a note, a claim against the plaintiff for boarding and otherwise caring for his minor child. The court held that such a claim in set-off was not proper, as the wife under the circumstances could not recover therefor. The decision in that case followed the established common law principle that there is a presumption that a husband living in and supporting a household is entitled to the money paid for board furnished therein, the wife having no separate business or interest of her own in connection therewith, and there being no agreement or understanding between them to the contrary.

The facts and circumstances appearing in the above case, and those in the instant case, are so unlike that the cases are clearly distinguishable. The wife in the Cory case was not resting her claim upon an express contract or agreement, as is the plaintiff in the case at bar. If any contract was involved in the former case, it was in the nature of the implied contract between the plaintiff therein, the father of the child who was being supplied with board, and the defendant's husband, who was furnishing such board. Because of this situation in the Cory case, it was not necessary for the court in making its decision, although at that time certain of the statutes giving added rights to married women had already been enacted, to refer to or apply any of such statutes, as they were not brought in issue. The fact, however, that under the evidence in the instant case the plaintiff's claim is founded upon an express contract, renders pertinent the sections of the statutes hereinbefore referred to.

In particular, however, there was no evidence in the Cory ■ case that the husband furnished board with the understand *412 ing that his wife was to receive the pay therefor as her own, whereas in the instant case a finding that the plaintiff’s husband in 1917 had such an understanding with her is supported by reasonable inferences and deductions from the evidence. In this connection it appears from the testimony of the plaintiff’s former husband, a witness for the defendant, and who was divorced from the plaintiff at the time of the trial, but who was living with her on friendly terms in 1917, that it was at his suggestion that the plaintiff’s mother came to live with them in September of that year. At that time he made no attempt to get money for the mother’s support from her sons Frank Stone and Edward Isaacson, and himself made no agreement of any kind with them in relation thereto. He testified that his wife, the plaintiff, ran the house, handled all the finances, and paid all the bills.

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Bluebook (online)
195 A. 700, 59 R.I. 407, 1937 R.I. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ash-v-isaacson-ri-1937.